He was asked at a press conference following a Group of 20 meeting for his reaction to House approval of measures that will cut spending by about $61.5 billion from current levels in a move seen as a challenge to the Obama administration to show it is serious about reducing deficits.

The House action is expected to be stopped by Obama or Democrats in the Senate, but it points to a growing possibility of government shutdowns if a compromise is not worked out by March 4, when current funding expires.

“In our judgment, the continuing opposition…in the House would undermine and damage our capacity to create jobs and expand the economy,” Geithner said.

The United States has faced international criticism for running huge budget deficits that it finances through borrowing from abroad. Geithner told the G20 the Obama administration’s budget for 2012 will meet its G20 commitment to halve fiscal deficits by 2013 and stabilize debt-to-GDP ratios by 2016.

Republicans claim the Obama administration needs to show it is serious about cutting spending and are trying to force the issue in Congress.

Geithner said the country was at “the beginning of a very important national debate” on its finances but said the economy must first regain its health so that Americans can start to live within their means.

He suggested the economic recovery now under way from the 2007-2009 financial crisis still needs to be strengthened, after which it will be easier to tackle deficits.

“I am very confident that the Democrats and the Republicans will come together on a program to not just reduce spending but reduce long-term deficits,” he said.

Evidently Geithner doesn’t understand all the government does is spend/waste money and produce nothing of value for the most part as in the private sector. People need to quit depending on government to somehow restore the old order of the day. The greater majority of Obama’s so-called ‘stimulus bill’ money has been frittered away on questionable projects or simply pitched down fraudulent ratholes. For the government to spend its way out of abject, astronomical, crushing debt is ludicrous.

If Bernanke~Geithner had any genuinely grounded economic savvy they’d quit printing money, dry up the supply and start raising short rates so private citizens and pension funds could depend on a decent return of their investment capital in government debt instruments, instead they are holding rates at an artificially low level to allow banksters and investment firms access to cheap money via the U.S. government in order create more pseudo-inflationary bubbles in order to make obscene profits in the commodities markets which are no showing inflationary trends. Per Bernanke, inflation is flat to non-existent. The man is an outright, blatant “LIAR” and a running dog for the shadowy bankers that own the Fed…! Yep, they have a plan for the us, and it ain’t good. : |

So in addition to trashing the economy they’ve even robbed the common people of a decent return on their deposits forcing the foolish to risk their money in the stock market for another current repeat bubble that could fall flat on its face at any time with people taking a massive haircut again to their investment and retirement portfolios. We’ve been hijacked by slick talking banking and investment thieves in high places and seemingly there’s no way to flush them out as long as our elected ‘dear leaders’ surround themselves with some of the worst examples of such from academia and the business sector as their so-called advisers.

Good point Al. Since such a thought would never cross my mind, I assumed tzx4 was focusing on what to me was an obvious mistake on my part relative to the private sector vs. government spending, waste and fraud.

How so, Tiny Tim? Why would any one believe any thing you say when you and your highly educated bankster buddies couldn’t foresee the crisis looming in the first place?

You and all your financial wizards have created this mess, and we’re supposed to believe you can lead us out of it with more wizardry, more spending, more gambling with house money, and more monetary inflation?

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